All student work is the responsibility of the student. Students must be transparent about any influences that inform their work; document any ideas, text, images, or other content made by other people or tools; and cite these sources in ways applicable to the assigned genre.
All work completed in this course must meet our university-wide standards of academic honesty. You should be familiar with the policies outlined in the Georgia Tech
. Please feel free to come to me with any questions about this policy. Lack of knowledge about this policy is not a reasonable explanation for a violation.
One serious kind of academic misconduct is plagiarism, which occurs when a writer, speaker, or designer deliberately uses someone else’s language, ideas, images, or other original material or code without fully acknowledging its source by quotation marks as appropriate, in footnotes or endnotes, in works cited, and in other ways as appropriate to the genre. Submitting work that you previously composed and/or submitted for another course is also considered plagiarism. Additionally, fabricating sources—citing “sources” that do not actually exist or that do not include the quotations or ideas you attribute to them—is a form of academic dishonesty.
If you engage in plagiarism or any other form of academic dishonesty, the minimum penalty will be failure of the assignment in which you have engaged in academic misconduct, and you will be referred to the Office of Student Integrity, as required by Georgia Tech policy.
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